The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Buckeyes hold off Hoosiers in big game

- By Mitch Stacy

Number 9 Indiana climbed to its highest AP Top 25 poll ranking in over 50 years, then played Ohio State.

COLUMBUS » After climbing to its highest AP Top 25 poll ranking in more than a half century, No. 9 Indiana got a chance to find out how it measured up with Big Ten behemoth Ohio State, a team the Hoosiers hadn’t beaten in 32 years.

They came up short but sure made it interestin­g — and a lot closer than the No. 3 Buckeyes would have liked.

Behind quarterbac­k Michael Penix Jr., Indiana (4-1) rallied from a four-touchdown deficit in the second half only to be outlasted by the Buckeyes, 4235, on a rainy afternoon Nov. 21 in an all-but-empty Ohio Stadium.

“You know, people didn’t think we belonged on the field with Ohio State, but I think we showed that today,” Indiana coach Tom Allen said. “I think we’re a good football team, a really good football team.”

The Buckeyes (4- 0) were happy to get out of there with a win after leading, 35-7, early in the second half and allowing Indiana to climb back to within one score. Two weeks ago, Ohio State led, 35-3, at halftime and were outscored, 24-14, in the second half in a win over Rutgers.

“We’ve got to figure out a way to close out games,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said. “This is kind of the second week now we let a team hang around a little bit, and we’ve got to get that fixed. But (there were) so many great things in this game. Indiana is a good team, they’re a top10 team so this was not easy.”

The Buckeyes defense in the second half struggled to slow down Penix, who had the best statistica­l day of his career — 27 for 51 for a career-high 491 yards and five touchdowns.

Penix passed for four touchdowns in the second half but also made a critical error, tossing an intercepti­on that Ohio State’s Shaun Wade returned for a touchdown at the end of the third quarter. The game might have been different if it wasn’t for that.

The running game helped

Ohio State maintain control when things were dicey. The Buckeyes had two late drives after the Hoosiers got within in a touchdown that didn’t result in points, but burned clock and Indiana’s timeouts.

The Hoosiers last possession started deep in their own territory with 38 seconds left and ended with a desperatio­n lateral play that never crossed midfield.

Master Teague ran for a career-high 169 yards and two touchdowns, and Justin Fields accounted for three scores as the Buckeyes amassed 607 yards of offense.

Fields was 18 for 30 for 300 yards and two touch

down passes, but he also threw his first three intercepti­ons of the season and was sacked five times. He ran for 78 yards and a touchdown.

“Of course I made bad decisions,” Fields said. “I ended up with three picks but we got the W today. That’s all that matters. We got the W, and we’re 4-0.”

Garrett Wilson had seven catches for 169 yards — his fourth straight game of 100plus yards — and two scores for the Buckeyes.

The takeaway

Indiana: Penix had a great day but came up just short of being able to dig the Hoosiers out of the hole

and Indiana has now lost 26 straight to the Buckeyes.

“I loved what I saw today, but obviously we didn’t get the result wanted, so it hurts,” Penix said.

Ohio State: The Buckeyes took awhile to get going, and Fields had a few rough patches. Getting outscored in the second half for the second straight game has be to concerning.

Poll implicatio­ns

Indiana: After reaching its highest poll ranking in over a half century, the Hoosiers will tumble slightly.

Ohio State: Beating another Top 10 team should get the Buckeyes some at

tention and possibly some more votes.

Fabulous Fryfogle

Indiana’s Ty Fryfogle became the first receiver in Big Ten history with backto-back games with 200 receiving yards. He caught seven passes for 218 yards and three touchdowns on Saturday after grabbing 11 for 200 yards last week in the win over Michigan State.

Empty ‘Shoe

A football game at Ohio Stadium has never lacked atmosphere as much as this one. Because of runaway COVID cases in Columbus, public health officials de

cided to empty out the cavernous venue of everyone except players, staff and media. A few hundred family and friends at least generated some cheers and jeers at the first two home games at the 105,000- capacity Horseshoe. The thousands of cutouts posted around the lower bowl sat silent and soggy in the dreary afternoon. All told, there were just 635 souls in the place.

Up next

Indiana is scheduled to go on the road against Maryland, which has had its last two games canceled because of positive COVID tests there.

Ohio State is at Illinois.

 ?? JAY LAPRETE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ohio State running back Master Teague pushes into the end zone for a touchdown against Indiana on Nov. 21 in Columbus.
JAY LAPRETE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ohio State running back Master Teague pushes into the end zone for a touchdown against Indiana on Nov. 21 in Columbus.
 ?? JAY LAPRETE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ohio State receiver Garrett Wilson runs after a catch past Indiana defensive back Bryant Fitzgerald during the first half Nov. 21 in Columbus.
JAY LAPRETE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ohio State receiver Garrett Wilson runs after a catch past Indiana defensive back Bryant Fitzgerald during the first half Nov. 21 in Columbus.

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